WORDS+IMAGES - Cuyahoga County Public Library
Transcription
WORDS+IMAGES - Cuyahoga County Public Library
M U S E I S T H E Q U A R T E R L Y J O U R N A L P U B L I S H E D WORDS+IMAGES 05.09 ISSUE B Y T H E L I T {THE COVER IMAGE } No. Grassroots luxury for everyday life. ADDRESS UNKNOWN BY DAVID GIFFELS I ’m totally serious. Ain’t I right about Stan and Bennigan? It’s him. —Bennigan? Yeah, Bennigan. Just take a look. He still has that limp from the time with the circus pony. —There’s no way. Look at that suit. That’s a thousand dollar suit, easy. And look what he’s driving. And there – look what he’s got sitting in his passenger seat. No way is that Bennigan. Wait. Watch – look where he’s going. Yup. He is walking straight through the front door of Wilson & Perroni. That chump has gone out and done it. —That is not Bennigan. I’m tellin’ you right now, that is not Bennigan. —Oh, sorry. I was watching the backhoe. It just looks like it’s eating that wall. The Hornblatt Building, pile of bricks, just like that. Hundred years, gone. Wonder what’s behind it ... Christ. I don’t know why I bother with this anymore. Where did our dreams go? What happened to all those nights we sat here and allowed ourselves to believe that we were going to be the ones, the ones everybody watched, every single one of us, fearless in our ambition, unafraid to say exactly what we wanted and then to want more and to believe that it was going to happen. We fucking burned. We were steel. It was bound to happen. Maggie, you turned heads all day long, just sitting there. It all came to you so easy. Christ, Joe. You most of all. We all knew you were the one. We were good, but you, Joe … and look at you now. —Well it’s not like you exactly set the world on fire. Listen. It’s Bennigan. It is. You can debate all you want, but you’re making the wrong argument. You don’t believe it’s Bennigan because you don’t want to believe that a guy like us can make it out there. ‘Cause if Bennigan’s a success, that means you’re a failure. That’s what this is really about. Ain’t that right Joe? —Huh? walden Watch it, Maggie. Don’t you even start. You all know what happened to me. You know it wasn’t my fault. I was on my way. I was there. I had it. The rest — you can’t blame me for that. Nobody could have seen that coming. None of you could have. —Wait. He’s coming back out. Lordy lord. Would you look at that? I’ve never seen one that big. It ain’t frickin’ fair. COVER LIVE WALDEN INN WALDEN SPA WALDEN CLUB WALDEN GATHER WALDEN BUNNIES CHUCK MINTZ Screw it. I’m hungry. Who wants Chinese? M 05 09 M U S M E 5336_WD Muse_apr_09.indd 1 2/5/09 6:07:48 PM 3 MUSE IS THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL PUBLISHED BY THE LIT VO LU M E 2 , I SS U E 2 JUDITH MANSOUR Editor judith@the-lit.org T I M L AC H I N A Design Director tim@wjgco.com R AY M C N I E C E Poetry Editor words4muse@the-lit.org R O B JAC KS O N Fiction Editor words4muse@the-lit.org A L E N KA B A N CO Art Editor images4muse@the-lit.org K E L LY K . B I R D Advertising Account Manager advertising4muse@the-lit.org contents 05 09 M U S M E 4 03 Address Unknown By David Giffels 11 The Vampire Lover By David Megenhardt 06 The Transmitter Field By Steve Smith 24 Geniosity.com By Carolyn Jack 07 Fusion is Not Granted By Bree 25 Book Archaeology By Rob Jackson The Uninhabited World By Robert Miltner 26 Like It Was Something Good on TV By Jake Snodgrass BILLY DELFTS LISA, 2008 8.5X8.5" FROM THE SERIES: STREET PORTRAITS COMMISSIONED BY CLEVELAND MAGAZINE SUBMISSIONS (content evident) may be sent electronically to words4muse@the-lit.org, images4muse@the-lit.org. We prefer electronic submissions. MUSE publishes all genres of creative writing — including but not limited to poetry, fiction, essay, memoir, humor, lyrics, and drama; stories about the writing life; profiles; book reviews; news of importance to writers, publishers, and agents; and other things which might stimulate public interest in reading and writing. Preference is given Ohio-based authors. Founded in 1987 as Ohio Writer, MUSE is the quarterly journal published by The Lit, a nonprofit literary arts organization. No part of this journal may be reproduced without written consent of the publisher. THELIT CLEVELAND’S LITERARY CENTER ARTCRAFT BUILDING 2 5 7 0 S U P E R I O R AV E N U E SUITE 203 CLEVELAND, OHIO 44114 216 694.0000 BACKGROUND BILLY DELPS PLAYGROUND, NYC, 2003 W W W. T H E - L I T. O R G Spring in Cleveland usually means that we can look forward to only another few grueling weeks of sleet, ice, and clouds. In lieu of new buds, warmth, and sunshine, we’ve brought you new voices and artists for the 6th issue of MUSE. Alenka, Tim, Ray, Kelly, and I have been lucky enough to find Rob, our newest staffer to MUSE’s editorial board. Rob Jackson, our newly appointed fiction editor and creator of our new column, Book Archaeology, is first and foremost a voracious and judicious reader. He has an eye for prose that is edgy and well-crafted, and he looks forward to reading your submissions (hint, hint!), and we look forward to hearing your voices. Also in this issue, Alenka has provided new images created by cover artist Chuck Mintz, and interior work by Billy Delfts, Jeff Yost, and Margaret E. Arthur. Ray has chosen new poetry and prose, crafted in response to those images, by David Giffels, Bree, and Robert Miltner. Rob premiers his books column and short fiction by emerging writers David Megenhardt and Jake Snodgrass. I read each of their submissions, satisfied that new work is blooming all around us in Cleveland, despite clouds, rain, and an unstable economy. I’m grateful that new work is never in short supply here in Northeast Ohio. In The LIT’s (and now MUSE’s) time-honored tradition of collaborating with other art forms and arts organizations to bring heightened visibility to literature, we revisit the very popular Mirror of the Arts program for our 35th anniversary celebration on Saturday, June 6th at Convivium 33 Gallery. We honor John Gabel, Bonnie Jacobson, Robert McDonough, Leonard Trawick, and the late Cyril A. Dostal, early members whose ongoing leadership, direction, and support have sustained us. We will also recognize with lifetime membership individuals whose poetry and dedication to craft shaped our mission: Mary Chadbourne, Christopher Franke, Nina Freedlander Gibans, Diane Kendig, Joan Nicholl, and John Stickney. Using For Closure: Visions of Reality, Words of Promise; An Exhibition of Photography, Words, and Found Materials as the backdrop for this celebration, honorees and guests will be treated to music, performance, libations, and hors d’oeuvres to mark this special occasion. There’s a lot to celebrate here. Including spring. Judith M 05 09 M U S E M 05 09 VO LU M E 2 , I SS U E 2 5 MUSE IS THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL PUBLISHED BY THE LIT VO LU M E 2 , I SS U E 2 JUDITH MANSOUR Editor judith@the-lit.org T I M L AC H I N A Design Director tim@wjgco.com R AY M C N I E C E Poetry Editor words4muse@the-lit.org R O B JAC KS O N Fiction Editor words4muse@the-lit.org A L E N KA B A N CO Art Editor images4muse@the-lit.org K E L LY K . B I R D Advertising Account Manager advertising4muse@the-lit.org contents 05 09 M U S M E 4 03 Address Unknown By David Giffels 11 The Vampire Lover By David Megenhardt 06 The Transmitter Field By Steve Smith 24 Geniosity.com By Carolyn Jack 07 Fusion is Not Granted By Bree 25 Book Archaeology By Rob Jackson The Uninhabited World By Robert Miltner 26 Like It Was Something Good on TV By Jake Snodgrass BILLY DELFTS LISA, 2008 8.5X8.5" FROM THE SERIES: STREET PORTRAITS COMMISSIONED BY CLEVELAND MAGAZINE SUBMISSIONS (content evident) may be sent electronically to words4muse@the-lit.org, images4muse@the-lit.org. We prefer electronic submissions. MUSE publishes all genres of creative writing — including but not limited to poetry, fiction, essay, memoir, humor, lyrics, and drama; stories about the writing life; profiles; book reviews; news of importance to writers, publishers, and agents; and other things which might stimulate public interest in reading and writing. Preference is given Ohio-based authors. Founded in 1987 as Ohio Writer, MUSE is the quarterly journal published by The Lit, a nonprofit literary arts organization. No part of this journal may be reproduced without written consent of the publisher. THELIT CLEVELAND’S LITERARY CENTER ARTCRAFT BUILDING 2 5 7 0 S U P E R I O R AV E N U E SUITE 203 CLEVELAND, OHIO 44114 216 694.0000 BACKGROUND BILLY DELPS PLAYGROUND, NYC, 2003 W W W. T H E - L I T. O R G Spring in Cleveland usually means that we can look forward to only another few grueling weeks of sleet, ice, and clouds. In lieu of new buds, warmth, and sunshine, we’ve brought you new voices and artists for the 6th issue of MUSE. Alenka, Tim, Ray, Kelly, and I have been lucky enough to find Rob, our newest staffer to MUSE’s editorial board. Rob Jackson, our newly appointed fiction editor and creator of our new column, Book Archaeology, is first and foremost a voracious and judicious reader. He has an eye for prose that is edgy and well-crafted, and he looks forward to reading your submissions (hint, hint!), and we look forward to hearing your voices. Also in this issue, Alenka has provided new images created by cover artist Chuck Mintz, and interior work by Billy Delfts, Jeff Yost, and Margaret E. Arthur. Ray has chosen new poetry and prose, crafted in response to those images, by David Giffels, Bree, and Robert Miltner. Rob premiers his books column and short fiction by emerging writers David Megenhardt and Jake Snodgrass. I read each of their submissions, satisfied that new work is blooming all around us in Cleveland, despite clouds, rain, and an unstable economy. I’m grateful that new work is never in short supply here in Northeast Ohio. In The LIT’s (and now MUSE’s) time-honored tradition of collaborating with other art forms and arts organizations to bring heightened visibility to literature, we revisit the very popular Mirror of the Arts program for our 35th anniversary celebration on Saturday, June 6th at Convivium 33 Gallery. We honor John Gabel, Bonnie Jacobson, Robert McDonough, Leonard Trawick, and the late Cyril A. Dostal, early members whose ongoing leadership, direction, and support have sustained us. We will also recognize with lifetime membership individuals whose poetry and dedication to craft shaped our mission: Mary Chadbourne, Christopher Franke, Nina Freedlander Gibans, Diane Kendig, Joan Nicholl, and John Stickney. Using For Closure: Visions of Reality, Words of Promise; An Exhibition of Photography, Words, and Found Materials as the backdrop for this celebration, honorees and guests will be treated to music, performance, libations, and hors d’oeuvres to mark this special occasion. There’s a lot to celebrate here. Including spring. Judith M 05 09 M U S E M 05 09 VO LU M E 2 , I SS U E 2 5 the transmitter field The Uninhabited World Our village was all the world we needed. We bred red birds until we could afford babies. right where the city dump ended and gave way to a dark clearing we ran as children and tried to catch one another in the dark to catch someone and hold them their skin slippery from the sheen of summer nighttime fear and from running fast Fusion is Not Granted To marry is the best. Loft ilk, etched in acid Which changes a thing Over time. i was 7 and a half and that made me faster. center in the clearing were two transmitter lights, glowing red and warm like errant planets and if caught by a snaggle-toothed boy or redheaded girl you had laid down, if only for a moment on dry summer grasses, the ground still warm, to recharge by the blurry radiance of the twin red planets A nurse once ignored The fledgling/now u nurse Me, amid the recycled, U walk not fly with me. MARGARET E. ARTHUR COUPLE OIL, 60X46" an explosion of bone to bone went off in my head when Robert the Birdman slammed his wooden forehead into mine in a spiral of dizziness and we both fell backward 05 09 M U S M E 6 seed in the fields. I set down my hoe when the government forces trampled the tall oats and planted landmines to explode the feet off the insurgents. While they rounded up goats, ducks, and the other young men, we slipped Yr hip is mine & even Oft on a blurred stretch of Our landing. through shadows from our home to a farm shed at the village edge. BREE Do you remember how we awoke to the patch of blue sky in the roof? TRANSMITTER JEFF YOST only to become new men by the red lights of the transmitters i never loved the transmitter field any more than the night when Darlene gave us kool-aid jars long since emptied of peanut spread each punctured lid an instrument ringing with spinning metal and glass if the keeper could run and leap and catch the firefly that hung magically above then hovered slowly to the left or the right and should you be caught in the transmitter field with light in your jar you could run all night. At the refugee camp they stripped us like peapods and shaved us like sheep. We looked like sardines taken from a can. Each morning I see carts being pushed and when i laid down and prayed til my eyes were flash white with dreams i awoke and swear, still to this day, that i had taken down from the pitch clear sky far above the transmitters toward the open pit over the small hill beyond which the wind goes to die. Last month I aged a thousand years, this week another hundred more. Soon the salt will settle on my shadow and my bones will be covered in lime. a star in my jar. I dream I have the body of a white bird that flies around this beating world. steve smith You’ll know it’s me, floating like a kite, a skeleton holding an unsigned poem. ROBERT MILTNER 05 09 M U S E M and we began hurling rinds and hooting our confused lusts at the sky and the wind was whooshing by my red sunburned ears while my hands bled from the sharp stones, relics I dug from of the dirt so we could sow To the yellow birds nesting in the eaves? To the kick of army boots and gun butts? towering and humming on idle in the great and magnificent foreground of stars and Friday night when Roy cracked a watermelon we slurped and ran and spit seeds into the mystical darkness at one another, careless juice drizzling on rounded bellies At night our bodies were string beans in a box. You worked so hard your nails cracked 7 the transmitter field The Uninhabited World Our village was all the world we needed. We bred red birds until we could afford babies. right where the city dump ended and gave way to a dark clearing we ran as children and tried to catch one another in the dark to catch someone and hold them their skin slippery from the sheen of summer nighttime fear and from running fast Fusion is Not Granted To marry is the best. Loft ilk, etched in acid Which changes a thing Over time. i was 7 and a half and that made me faster. center in the clearing were two transmitter lights, glowing red and warm like errant planets and if caught by a snaggle-toothed boy or redheaded girl you had laid down, if only for a moment on dry summer grasses, the ground still warm, to recharge by the blurry radiance of the twin red planets A nurse once ignored The fledgling/now u nurse Me, amid the recycled, U walk not fly with me. MARGARET E. ARTHUR COUPLE OIL, 60X46" an explosion of bone to bone went off in my head when Robert the Birdman slammed his wooden forehead into mine in a spiral of dizziness and we both fell backward 05 09 M U S M E 6 seed in the fields. I set down my hoe when the government forces trampled the tall oats and planted landmines to explode the feet off the insurgents. While they rounded up goats, ducks, and the other young men, we slipped Yr hip is mine & even Oft on a blurred stretch of Our landing. through shadows from our home to a farm shed at the village edge. BREE Do you remember how we awoke to the patch of blue sky in the roof? TRANSMITTER JEFF YOST only to become new men by the red lights of the transmitters i never loved the transmitter field any more than the night when Darlene gave us kool-aid jars long since emptied of peanut spread each punctured lid an instrument ringing with spinning metal and glass if the keeper could run and leap and catch the firefly that hung magically above then hovered slowly to the left or the right and should you be caught in the transmitter field with light in your jar you could run all night. At the refugee camp they stripped us like peapods and shaved us like sheep. We looked like sardines taken from a can. Each morning I see carts being pushed and when i laid down and prayed til my eyes were flash white with dreams i awoke and swear, still to this day, that i had taken down from the pitch clear sky far above the transmitters toward the open pit over the small hill beyond which the wind goes to die. Last month I aged a thousand years, this week another hundred more. Soon the salt will settle on my shadow and my bones will be covered in lime. a star in my jar. I dream I have the body of a white bird that flies around this beating world. steve smith You’ll know it’s me, floating like a kite, a skeleton holding an unsigned poem. ROBERT MILTNER 05 09 M U S E M and we began hurling rinds and hooting our confused lusts at the sky and the wind was whooshing by my red sunburned ears while my hands bled from the sharp stones, relics I dug from of the dirt so we could sow To the yellow birds nesting in the eaves? To the kick of army boots and gun butts? towering and humming on idle in the great and magnificent foreground of stars and Friday night when Roy cracked a watermelon we slurped and ran and spit seeds into the mystical darkness at one another, careless juice drizzling on rounded bellies At night our bodies were string beans in a box. You worked so hard your nails cracked 7 The Vampire Lover BY DAVID MEGENHARDT M Y B O S S TO L D M E TO F I N D S O M E O N E to fill a sales job so I placed an ad in a local newspaper. Normally I wouldn’t handle hiring, but the human resources lady, Sheila Burst, had taken a medical leave because of shingles or a goiter, and my boss hated interviewing. M U S M U S E E 10 M 05 09 M 05 09 11 The Vampire Lover BY DAVID MEGENHARDT M Y B O S S TO L D M E TO F I N D S O M E O N E to fill a sales job so I placed an ad in a local newspaper. Normally I wouldn’t handle hiring, but the human resources lady, Sheila Burst, had taken a medical leave because of shingles or a goiter, and my boss hated interviewing. M U S M U S E E 10 M 05 09 M 05 09 11 05 09 M U S M E 12 esumes poured into the office and I began to wonder if I had made the job seem too good. The sales job of this particular territory was horrible and most of the recent hires exited the company humiliated. I had not put this information in the classified ad, but I did throw in a couple of exclamation points and the words “Sales Career” at the top in bold letters. Such simple chum worked better than I thought possible, but as the slush pile of resumes on the corner of my desk grew well past 400, I guessed that the catatonic regional economy had something to do with so many people seeking such a perversely bad job with an unknown company. So how did I come to hire Benny Coco out of a crop of overqualified college graduates, career lead salesmen, hustlers, consultants, free-falling executives, drunks, crazies, and beautiful young women looking to move out of their parents’ homes? Benny’s resume jumped out of the pile for every wrong reason. It had been copied on cheap paper, slightly askew and smudged. He had not proofread it thoroughly, so along with a batch of grammar mistakes several words were misspelled or missing. It was four pages long, listing a series of jobs held for no more than six or seven months, and for several he had written the reason for leaving in pen in the margins. I should have just sent it through the shredder, but near the middle of the third page he had listed “Comic Actor— The Beef O’Bundy Show” in his chronicle of experience. For a few years of my childhood baseball and the Beef O’Bundy Show were the two most important influences outside the family. The show came on at 11:30 PM on Friday night, right after the local news. O’Bundy and his dwarf sidekick, sometimes called “The Kid” and other times known by his full name Gimpy Von Shrieker, showed old horror and science fiction films and peppered the evening with crudely filmed comic sketches complete with a strangely resonant laugh track. They showed every film Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee had ever been in, the old Hammer Film stable of creaky horror tales with titles like Frankenstein Created Woman, Dracula has Risen from the Grave, and The Vampire Lover, and a slew of American black and white schlock. may have even been missing an ear. Her right side was stunning and perfect, the remnants of what I had seen on paper. I hired her anyway and she stayed with the company for two years before moving to Arizona to be a massage therapist. She was incredibly efficient and hardworking, and by hiring her my reputation as a hiring sage grew. I called Benny. He answered in a low mumble that seemed somewhere between a drunk and a hangover. When I told him the nature of the call he rallied his strength and his inflection sharpened. “Hey, I can’t say I wasn’t expecting the call. That resume is Sputnik. It’s rocket-fire. I’ve been to the moon and back, baby, on the vapor trail of that little piece of paper,” he revved up in a hammy patter. I didn’t hang up, which probably said more about me than Benny. Beef O’Bundy, Sputnik, nonsensical patter. I rubberneck at every crash as I am irresistibly drawn to disaster. “How does 11:00 AM Thursday look to you for an interview?” I asked. “I like flesh and blood. You tell me when and I’ll be there with winged feet and winged tips” “Are we agreed?” “You’ve said it. I’m ready to follow.” I highlighted the time and date and even drew a star on my desk calendar. The day came, our receptionist ushered in Benny, and we met near my door with a handshake. I loomed over him like a giant. His hand felt dry and brittle and his grip barely registered. I imagined he had to hold a glass of milk with two hands, with one hand under the bottom of the glass to keep it in the air. I offered him a seat and he waited until I was settled before easing slowly into his chair. The movement betrayed a ferocious case of hemorrhoids. I stared at a man at the end of his road. His blue jacket was shiny from wear and almost matched a green cotton tie secured with a giant Windsor knot. The shirt, blue and thin, had a frayed and worn collar that had been discolored by sweat. His glasses were enormous, crooked and pushed flat against the bridge of his nose. Perched atop his obviously bald head lay a dark gray toupee framed by a band of thin white hair. The toupee looked like it had been fashioned out of mouse fur. I didn’t think I had the energy to make it through the interview. I knew I had to throw him an easy opening so he could gain an advantage or I would have stared at him for a few moments and then asked him to leave. “So, I see you played on Beef O’Bundy. When I saw that I realized you were a celebrity when I was a kid. I don’t remember you though. What parts did you play?” I asked without much enthusi- asm because even Beef and Gimpy couldn’t pull me out of my funk. He ruminated on the question dramatically as he leaned back in his chair, placed a hand on his chin and struck a thoughtful frown. I felt my shoulders stoop and my head wobbled as I was on the precipice of a migraine. “Well, if you don’t mind me saying so, Beef O’Bundy is a cocksucker. Strong words I know, but a cocksucker nevertheless,” he concluded with a nod of his head. “Well, what parts did you play? Were you on camera?” “I was with Beef from 74 to 84, ten years. I played parts. Lot-o-parts. For instance, remember the running Tarzan gag we ran with. Like Tarzan kept trying to find coconuts, right, and Jane keeps nagging him about trying to find the right kind of coconuts, remember? Well, let’s just say I’m not above doing drag. You know what I saying?” I vaguely remembered the skit, and the best I could muster was a wan smile. “Remember the burping cigar store Indian?” “Halo kemosabe! Belllllchhhh!” I nearly shouted the catch phrase of this particular skit. It was pure reflex. I couldn’t believe I had retained the information and recalled it so easily. I warmed to him and we spent the next fifteen minutes discussing in detail all of the skits on the show whether he acted in them or not. I tried to talk to him about the horror movies they showed but he waved the line of inquiry away. “I never understood them. How can you understand a Dracula? And what the hell is Frankenstein? Jesus.” “Everyone always calls the monster ‘Frankenstein.’ It was actually Dr. Frankenstein, so other than it being the last name of his creator it had nothing to do with the actual monster,” I said seriously. Benny returned a blank stare and then realized he was out of his depth so he squirmed uneasily in his chair. So I asked him about his relationship with Beef O’Bundy. “He’s no good that one. I give him ten years and now he acts like he don’t know me. You know how many calls he hasn’t returned. It all went to his head. He’s just a big Pollack anyway. Nothing Irish about that sonofabitch.” Benny had some sales experience peppered throughout his long career but I never questioned him about any of it. I learned he fronted a Dixieland Jazz band called B. Coco and the Crawdaddies, had a short stint as a master of ceremonies in a downtown hotel, wrote a handful of unproduced and probably unread movie scripts, scouted talent for a record company, played accordion in a Polka band called the Bratwurst Boys, had a gig as a trombonist in a traveling circus, and even had tours of duty in a flour processing plant and a ketchup factory. 05 09 M U S E M R My first memory of the show is of my Dad coming home from the factory around 10:30 PM. The crunching of truck tires on the gravel drive announced the arrival of a bag of McDonald’s hamburgers that my brothers and I would devour. I was six or seven, and I tried to stay up to watch the movies I didn’t really understand. Every Friday night I passed out on the floor with my ear pressed into the carpet with my belly full of meat and my head filled with horrible dreams of blood-sucking monsters dressed in suits. I filled notebook after notebook with different renditions of Dracula, wolf men and women, and the Frankenstein monster, usually the Boris Karloff version. I collected plastic models of every horror figure I could find and crudely painted them. We created horror scenes in our backyard with masks and bed sheets for costumes, capturing them with my Dad’s brownie camera. I once went to school with bolts drawn on my neck, a remnant of an elaborate photo shoot. For the next eight years I watched Beef O’Bundy introduce the night’s movie, sometimes in a gorilla suit or dressed as an effeminate vampire sophisticate, and act in one insipid skit after another. After the punch line was delivered the actors predictably mugged for the camera and a twisted laugh track sounded. In one sequence they had a pizza eating contest. The standing champion was Mealmouth Malorgha, a 400 pound behemoth who could fold a whole pizza into his limber mouth. The only challenger I ever saw him lose to was an overweight rottweiler. In another skit the dwarf, who sported a wooly beard, dressed up like the New Year’s baby, walked around town asking for lollipops and wished everyone a happy New Year even though it was June. So is it any wonder that for years I had autographs of both Beef O’Bundy and Gimpy Von Shrieker tacked to my bulletin board? I had scored the autographs at a grand opening of a frozen custard stand where a thick knot or parents and kids my age had come out to see them. After they left we played Space Invaders and pinball and compared our autographs. For obvious reasons I pulled Benny’s resume to schedule him for an interview. Whenever I was given the task of interviewing I always managed to fog the process with my personal failings. Usually I pulled resumes of women who appeared beautiful on paper, unqualified though they may be, in hopes of passing a pleasant half-hour with someone not misshapen. Judging beauty from a resume was an inexact science at best, and my average hovered around 10 percent. Once I called a woman named Skye Love for an interview. Everything from her name to her voice on the phone to her chronological list of experiences that included modeling, clothing apparel manager, and her bachelor’s in communication pointed toward rare beauty. My instincts were correct, but unfortunately a car accident had mangled the left side of her head which was a confusion of scar tissue and shattered bone. I thought she 13 05 09 M U S M E 12 esumes poured into the office and I began to wonder if I had made the job seem too good. The sales job of this particular territory was horrible and most of the recent hires exited the company humiliated. I had not put this information in the classified ad, but I did throw in a couple of exclamation points and the words “Sales Career” at the top in bold letters. Such simple chum worked better than I thought possible, but as the slush pile of resumes on the corner of my desk grew well past 400, I guessed that the catatonic regional economy had something to do with so many people seeking such a perversely bad job with an unknown company. So how did I come to hire Benny Coco out of a crop of overqualified college graduates, career lead salesmen, hustlers, consultants, free-falling executives, drunks, crazies, and beautiful young women looking to move out of their parents’ homes? Benny’s resume jumped out of the pile for every wrong reason. It had been copied on cheap paper, slightly askew and smudged. He had not proofread it thoroughly, so along with a batch of grammar mistakes several words were misspelled or missing. It was four pages long, listing a series of jobs held for no more than six or seven months, and for several he had written the reason for leaving in pen in the margins. I should have just sent it through the shredder, but near the middle of the third page he had listed “Comic Actor— The Beef O’Bundy Show” in his chronicle of experience. For a few years of my childhood baseball and the Beef O’Bundy Show were the two most important influences outside the family. The show came on at 11:30 PM on Friday night, right after the local news. O’Bundy and his dwarf sidekick, sometimes called “The Kid” and other times known by his full name Gimpy Von Shrieker, showed old horror and science fiction films and peppered the evening with crudely filmed comic sketches complete with a strangely resonant laugh track. They showed every film Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee had ever been in, the old Hammer Film stable of creaky horror tales with titles like Frankenstein Created Woman, Dracula has Risen from the Grave, and The Vampire Lover, and a slew of American black and white schlock. may have even been missing an ear. Her right side was stunning and perfect, the remnants of what I had seen on paper. I hired her anyway and she stayed with the company for two years before moving to Arizona to be a massage therapist. She was incredibly efficient and hardworking, and by hiring her my reputation as a hiring sage grew. I called Benny. He answered in a low mumble that seemed somewhere between a drunk and a hangover. When I told him the nature of the call he rallied his strength and his inflection sharpened. “Hey, I can’t say I wasn’t expecting the call. That resume is Sputnik. It’s rocket-fire. I’ve been to the moon and back, baby, on the vapor trail of that little piece of paper,” he revved up in a hammy patter. I didn’t hang up, which probably said more about me than Benny. Beef O’Bundy, Sputnik, nonsensical patter. I rubberneck at every crash as I am irresistibly drawn to disaster. “How does 11:00 AM Thursday look to you for an interview?” I asked. “I like flesh and blood. You tell me when and I’ll be there with winged feet and winged tips” “Are we agreed?” “You’ve said it. I’m ready to follow.” I highlighted the time and date and even drew a star on my desk calendar. The day came, our receptionist ushered in Benny, and we met near my door with a handshake. I loomed over him like a giant. His hand felt dry and brittle and his grip barely registered. I imagined he had to hold a glass of milk with two hands, with one hand under the bottom of the glass to keep it in the air. I offered him a seat and he waited until I was settled before easing slowly into his chair. The movement betrayed a ferocious case of hemorrhoids. I stared at a man at the end of his road. His blue jacket was shiny from wear and almost matched a green cotton tie secured with a giant Windsor knot. The shirt, blue and thin, had a frayed and worn collar that had been discolored by sweat. His glasses were enormous, crooked and pushed flat against the bridge of his nose. Perched atop his obviously bald head lay a dark gray toupee framed by a band of thin white hair. The toupee looked like it had been fashioned out of mouse fur. I didn’t think I had the energy to make it through the interview. I knew I had to throw him an easy opening so he could gain an advantage or I would have stared at him for a few moments and then asked him to leave. “So, I see you played on Beef O’Bundy. When I saw that I realized you were a celebrity when I was a kid. I don’t remember you though. What parts did you play?” I asked without much enthusi- asm because even Beef and Gimpy couldn’t pull me out of my funk. He ruminated on the question dramatically as he leaned back in his chair, placed a hand on his chin and struck a thoughtful frown. I felt my shoulders stoop and my head wobbled as I was on the precipice of a migraine. “Well, if you don’t mind me saying so, Beef O’Bundy is a cocksucker. Strong words I know, but a cocksucker nevertheless,” he concluded with a nod of his head. “Well, what parts did you play? Were you on camera?” “I was with Beef from 74 to 84, ten years. I played parts. Lot-o-parts. For instance, remember the running Tarzan gag we ran with. Like Tarzan kept trying to find coconuts, right, and Jane keeps nagging him about trying to find the right kind of coconuts, remember? Well, let’s just say I’m not above doing drag. You know what I saying?” I vaguely remembered the skit, and the best I could muster was a wan smile. “Remember the burping cigar store Indian?” “Halo kemosabe! Belllllchhhh!” I nearly shouted the catch phrase of this particular skit. It was pure reflex. I couldn’t believe I had retained the information and recalled it so easily. I warmed to him and we spent the next fifteen minutes discussing in detail all of the skits on the show whether he acted in them or not. I tried to talk to him about the horror movies they showed but he waved the line of inquiry away. “I never understood them. How can you understand a Dracula? And what the hell is Frankenstein? Jesus.” “Everyone always calls the monster ‘Frankenstein.’ It was actually Dr. Frankenstein, so other than it being the last name of his creator it had nothing to do with the actual monster,” I said seriously. Benny returned a blank stare and then realized he was out of his depth so he squirmed uneasily in his chair. So I asked him about his relationship with Beef O’Bundy. “He’s no good that one. I give him ten years and now he acts like he don’t know me. You know how many calls he hasn’t returned. It all went to his head. He’s just a big Pollack anyway. Nothing Irish about that sonofabitch.” Benny had some sales experience peppered throughout his long career but I never questioned him about any of it. I learned he fronted a Dixieland Jazz band called B. Coco and the Crawdaddies, had a short stint as a master of ceremonies in a downtown hotel, wrote a handful of unproduced and probably unread movie scripts, scouted talent for a record company, played accordion in a Polka band called the Bratwurst Boys, had a gig as a trombonist in a traveling circus, and even had tours of duty in a flour processing plant and a ketchup factory. 05 09 M U S E M R My first memory of the show is of my Dad coming home from the factory around 10:30 PM. The crunching of truck tires on the gravel drive announced the arrival of a bag of McDonald’s hamburgers that my brothers and I would devour. I was six or seven, and I tried to stay up to watch the movies I didn’t really understand. Every Friday night I passed out on the floor with my ear pressed into the carpet with my belly full of meat and my head filled with horrible dreams of blood-sucking monsters dressed in suits. I filled notebook after notebook with different renditions of Dracula, wolf men and women, and the Frankenstein monster, usually the Boris Karloff version. I collected plastic models of every horror figure I could find and crudely painted them. We created horror scenes in our backyard with masks and bed sheets for costumes, capturing them with my Dad’s brownie camera. I once went to school with bolts drawn on my neck, a remnant of an elaborate photo shoot. For the next eight years I watched Beef O’Bundy introduce the night’s movie, sometimes in a gorilla suit or dressed as an effeminate vampire sophisticate, and act in one insipid skit after another. After the punch line was delivered the actors predictably mugged for the camera and a twisted laugh track sounded. In one sequence they had a pizza eating contest. The standing champion was Mealmouth Malorgha, a 400 pound behemoth who could fold a whole pizza into his limber mouth. The only challenger I ever saw him lose to was an overweight rottweiler. In another skit the dwarf, who sported a wooly beard, dressed up like the New Year’s baby, walked around town asking for lollipops and wished everyone a happy New Year even though it was June. So is it any wonder that for years I had autographs of both Beef O’Bundy and Gimpy Von Shrieker tacked to my bulletin board? I had scored the autographs at a grand opening of a frozen custard stand where a thick knot or parents and kids my age had come out to see them. After they left we played Space Invaders and pinball and compared our autographs. For obvious reasons I pulled Benny’s resume to schedule him for an interview. Whenever I was given the task of interviewing I always managed to fog the process with my personal failings. Usually I pulled resumes of women who appeared beautiful on paper, unqualified though they may be, in hopes of passing a pleasant half-hour with someone not misshapen. Judging beauty from a resume was an inexact science at best, and my average hovered around 10 percent. Once I called a woman named Skye Love for an interview. Everything from her name to her voice on the phone to her chronological list of experiences that included modeling, clothing apparel manager, and her bachelor’s in communication pointed toward rare beauty. My instincts were correct, but unfortunately a car accident had mangled the left side of her head which was a confusion of scar tissue and shattered bone. I thought she 13 05 09 M U S M E 14 would not play a joke on you.” “Never fool a fooler, but I have been known to fool a fool. Monday it is Chief. Halo kemosabe, bellcchhhhh!” He bounded out of the door. I didn’t feel any remorse until later that night when I was eating a bowl of soup, watching a west coast college football game. It occurred to me that the hiring decision could reflect poorly on me. How would I explain that of all the people in the world I ended up with Benny Coco? I couldn’t rescind the offer, but I felt sick at the prospect of Benny showing up to work on Monday. I could only hope that over the weekend he would splurge on a better matching toupee or wear unstained clothing. It wasn’t to be. On Monday we wore the same interview clothes and, if anything, his toupee looked as if it had caught mange and seemed dangerously close to disintegrating. I had rehearsed several excuses for when the boss caught sight of him, such as he was the uncle of an important customer or that I had stolen him from one of our competitors where he was a top salesman. All were too easily verified. I did come up with “Boss, you have to look beyond appearances. I just want a guy that can sell,” that I would use as a spell to confuse him long enough for Benny to prove he could do the job. That, and the fact that no one, not long-legged women or men with luxurious hair, had been able to hold the job for more than six months, gave me leverage. The boss saw him later in the morning in the coffee room while we were taking a break from Benny’s initial training. “It’s a pleasure to meet you, sir. I’m excited about the prospect of working here. I think I’ll be able to hit the ground running and make you happy you hired me,” Benny said in liquid tone. I thought I saw the boss’ moustache twitch and his eyes may have lingered a little too long on Benny’s pate. He held out his hand and Benny gave him a firm handshake. “It’s good to have you on board,” the boss mumbled from the back of his throat before he poured his coffee and retreated back to his office. The boss stared into his coffee cup as he passed me. I didn’t take that as a good sign. I wondered how long it would be before he called me into the office to ream me. I felt reasonably protected by my carefully crafted spell, but he could be a moody and unreasonable man. If he made the meeting too painful I would have to remind him of some of his less than perfect hires, like the receptionist who was addicted to blowing the delivery drivers and posing for nude photos or the janitor who lived in the supply room for a year before being caught. I decided against ever bringing up Danny Ribovec, a murderer who addicted half of the employees to pills. No one ever brought up Danny. The call never came and Benny concentrated on the training. He learned the job quickly and made friends with the front office staff, making sure to fawn over the secretaries and the receptionist. I saw him once or twice talking baseball with the boss, standing in the doorway of the boss’ office, coffee in hand, and chatting leisurely about the intricacies of the game. The boss didn’t know a goddamn thing about baseball and after listening for a few moments I realized neither did Benny. The boss had a delinquent son who showed some ability in little league, so he thought the little bastard was going straight to the majors. For months he cajoled the staff about the kid’s prospects and by now everyone was weary from his imbecility. Benny listened and ingratiated himself with comments like: “Kid’s a lefty? I think the show has scouts in elementary schools looking for lefties. I wouldn’t doubt it. Don’t think it don’t happen. Struck out eight batters in a row? Ohhh, baby. Maybe they’ll be making a movie someday “A League of HIS Own.” We were all relieved to have someone on staff willing to take the flak, so Benny became something like a family’s favorite crippled and blind pet. He even began selling. His first quarter sales were 36% higher than the previous salesman and the third highest aggregate for that territory in six years. With Benny and Skye Love on my hiring resume I was beginning to be thought of as a hiring guru. Chas Butterman, a long time successful salesman, caught me in the parking lot one day as I was coming back from lunch. “What the hell did you see?” Chas was wearing a three-piece gray suit. The vest had grown tighter over the years and now looked like Saran wrap stretched over his meaty chest and belly. “What?” I asked. I was nearly incoherent. I had met my girlfriend at our apartment for lunch and took her from behind. The image of her ass was still prominent in my thoughts. No.49 Join us, June 25 at the Hanna Theater for our 49th Annual Awards Event and meet the 2009 Cleveland Arts Prize winners. 6:00 PM THE ANNUAL AWARDS EVENT BEGINS. Winners will be feted as you hear their history and see their work. A short performance will follow the presentation of the medals. 7:15 PM PARTY WITH THE WINNERS. Following the ceremony, a reception will take place in the Hanna Theater's historic lobby. The cash bar opens and the food appears. Become part of the Cleveland Arts Scene. artsPRIZE C L E V E L A N D You can purchase tickets at www.clevelandartsprize.org, or send a check to: Cleveland Arts Prize, PO Box 21126, Cleveland, Ohio 44121. Patron Ticket—$250 ($220 tax deductible) General Ticket— $50 ($20 tax deductible) Tickets will be held at the door. Open seating. THE GALLERY AT Aftermath Works by Chris Zahner Gallery hours: Monday-Friday, 10AM-5PM Saturday by appointment www.galleryatgrays.com 10717 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland OH 44102 p: 216 458 7695 f: 216 458 7694 05 09 M U S E M At the end of the interview I hired him. I had only interviewed a handful of candidates from the massive slush pile growing on my desk, but who could have been better than Benny? I handed him the health insurance application, 401K information, and W-4 in manila folder and told him to return on the next Monday with them completed and to be ready for work. He said ‘thank you’ at least eight or nine time using different inflections and a couple of different accents. He held the folder with both hands. A slight tremor in his left hand betrayed an oncoming disease. He paused. I waited for him to make a movement toward the door or at least acknowledge my instructions. After the moment became awkward he raised his eyes which were sparkling with tears. “This is no fooling right? I’m taking it that I am NOT on Candid Camera, OK? B. Coco doesn’t want to celebrate over the weekend only to find out it was a BIG hoax played at his expense.” “No, Mr. Coco. I have made you a serious offer of hire. I 15 MM UU SS M M EE 16 16 Around this time I noticed that the other employees always referred to Benny as “your guy” or “that guy you hired” when telling a story about him. With credit, comes blame. My status as guru was on shaky ground unless Benny adopted a more reasonable diet in line with the capabilities of his colon. I doubted anyone had directly confronted him, so I decided to talk to him. Keeping my status was worth the effort. I called Benny into my office, shut the door and turned on him quickly. “Benny, you cannot fart wherever you please in the office. I’ve got complaints from everywhere. People say they feel like they work in a landfill when you’re around. We can’t have people calling off sick because of your farts. Seriously. Did you know this was a problem?” “I’ve been eating my fill. It’s been a while since I’ve had three squares. I’ve never shit so much in my life. Complaints? If you’re going to do something do it well. Complaints about my gas?” I started hearing a few complaints from the secretaries about his indiscriminate farting. Brenda Weeker, a faded and overweight beauty, pulled me aside. “The last time it was nearly in my face. He didn’t even say excuse me. He’s a nice old guy, but my husband doesn’t even fart on me like that.” I had witnessed it a couple of times. Once in the break room he blew what sounded like a bugle from his ass and the smell was terrifying. Another time we were in a sales meeting. The sales manager droned on about expectations and the ramifications of not surpassing last year’s sales. Suddenly Benny’s wooden chair seat rattled and the two guys seated on either side of him turned their heads in disgust. The sales manager paused and narrowed his eyes at Benny. “Ah, too much bean in the burrito my good man. I apologize to the delicate natures of my compatriots.” “This is a meeting, Benny, Jesus. Go to the goddamn toilet,” said the guy seated to his left. “Hey, didn’t you know I played trombone. I’m a natural. Nature versus nurture. Nature always wins” After a time a complaint made it to the boss’ desk. The boss slapped his right palm flat on his desk. “Goddamnit. I’ve got a guy who does nothing but make money for the company and you mental midgets want him fired because he breaks wind. Are you out of your goddamn minds? What do you want me to do about it? I’ll build a hermetically sealed room around him so nobody gets offended. Christ,” said the boss in the retelling of the scene that made its way around the company in the next few days. “Seriously, if a couple people turn on you who have the boss’ ear you’re done for.” “I thought I was doing well.” “You are doing well. We are very pleased with your performance.” “But there’s talk of firing me? You’re going the fire me because I’m doing well,” Benny said as a thousand hurts, slights and disappointments welled up to the surface. “No, you’re misunderstanding me. There’s no talk yet of firing you. There is talk about your farts, which, if you consider it a moment, is not a scenario you should wish to continue. You want to be known for your performance, not your gas.” “This is crazy. I’ve been treated in a lot of ways but this is a cake topper.” “You’re not being treated in any way. You are farting and offending people. You need to stop that, find a bathroom or a deserted corner or go outside where there is wind and do your business there. If you take care of this. If you are mindful of other people. If you pay attention to what you’re eating. It goes away and everybody goes back to being happy.” “Are we done, sir? Because there are sales to be made out there. And I’m in here.” “I don’t know. Did you understand what I’m saying?” “Yes,” he said as he lowered his head. I was pretty sure he was crying. “Go, go make your sales.” I waved him off and averted my head to give him time to compose himself. He left noiselessly. I couldn’t help thinking I had made matters worse. For the first time since my early trepidation when I hired him, I felt Benny’s tenure with the company would end badly. Appletree Books 12419 Cedar Rd. Cleveland, Ohio 216.791.2665 Fine Arts and Antiques Bring in this ad for a complimentary glass of wine. Monthly Auctions Our next auctions will be May 2 and June 13 at 1pm Go Green With Gray’s The fun way to recycle 05 09 www.graysauctioneers.com 10717 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland OH 44102 | p: 216 458 7695 f: 216 458 7694 M U S E M 05 02 09 09 “In Coco. What did you see that nobody else could? Are you Nostradamus or a fucking gypsy fucking fortuneteller?” “He’s doing well.” “Well? That little fucker is kicking ass all over town. It’s like he knows everybody. He’s had every job in the goddamn world and he sells his ass off. Tell me, is he using Beef O’Bundy to get into places?” “No, I don’t think they talk anymore. I don’t think he’s even using Gimpy von Shrieker.” “Shit. The guy’s a fucking natural. You, sir, have the balls of a lion.” “What? Chas was already heading toward the door, shaking his head as he went. Over the next quarter his sales held steady and he invested in a couple of new dress shirts, short sleeved, and a new pair of slacks he wore every other day. I could swear he was spray painting his shoes to keep them a reasonable black. 17 Communities in Conversation: Judaism Christianity and Islam Communities in Conversation is a 6-week, scholar-led, interfaith study and discussion group exploring three great religions and their modern relationships. Shaker Heights Public Library Cuyahoga County Public Library Chagrin Falls Branch 16500 Van Aken Boulevard Shaker Heights, Ohio 44120 216-991-2030 100 East Orange Street Chagrin Falls, Ohio 44022 440-247-3556 7:30 p.m. Mondays 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays April 20, 27, May 4, 11, 18, and Tuesday May 26 April 28, May 5, May 12, May 19, May 26, and June 2 Sponsored by The Chautauqua Institution Cuyahoga County Public Library Shaker Heights Public Library Cuyahoga County Public Library Parma-South Branch 7335 Ridge Road Parma, Ohio 44129 440-885-5362 Registration is limited. Please call the library where you will attend. Study guides are available at each library location. 7:30 p.m. Thursdays April 30, May 7, May 14, May 21, May 28 WBg_09_Muse_Jan 1/8/09 8:44 PM Page 1 Market Square 12 shops + soda fountain Largest used bookstore between Cleveland and Pittsburgh 50,000 in stock, all categories 50¢ paperbacks, K-12 textbooks, older computer & business, etc.??? 10,00 record albums from $1. Antiques, collectables, curios, dishes, glassware, furniture, art, new & used houswares & hardwares, Amish jams & relishes, wallpaper $8, borders, specialities. Local history in an 1894 brick building, Rts 5 & 7, Kinsman, OH, 6 miles south of Rt 322 on PA line 05 02 09 09 M M U U S S M E E 18 18 330.876.3178 www.kinsman.us suttondonald@cmbarqmail.com Mon-Fri 10am-6pm Sat-Sun 10am-5pm WBg William Busta Gallery Cleveland Ohio 2731 Prospect Avenue Cleveland OH 44115 williambustagallery.com 216.298.9071 The complaints stopped and for weeks Benny was less of a presence around the office. I didn’t see him at the boss’ door chatting about baseball. He poured his coffee and exited the break room without engaging anyone. He seemed to be spending more time in the field. His personality faded, his quirks were suppressed as he became fully incorporated into the staff. Then the third quarter sales figures came out. He had made one sale throughout the quarter. It was the lowest figure ever recorded in the territory. Even Dave Burns, a salesman who had a heart transplant recorded more sales in the quarter in which he had the operation than Benny’s posting. The sales manager and the boss met with him behind a closed door. I checked the door periodically as the meeting lasted for hours. I could tell Benny had held his job as the time went by. Firings were over in minutes. The door would shut and moments later the victim would emerge with a cardboard box and an escort. The door swung open. I heard laughing. “Halo kemosabe! Beellllllchhh,” the boss chortled. Benny backed out of the office, making mock bows and hammy facial exaggerations. When he turned to retreat to his cubicle, Benny seemed buoyed, a trace of a grin on his face, looking determined with a minor swagger to his walk. Hours later I saw him in his cubicle, head in hands, staring at the phone. I watched him for awhile but he didn’t move. “Benny, are you sick?” He didn’t answer. I entered the space and placed a hand on his shoulder. I felt nothing but thin polyester over bone. “Benny, are you sick?” His head jerked up and he swung the chair around wildly. His lips glistened with drool. It took a few moments for his eyes to focus on me. “Whoa, sneaking up on a guy while he’s thinking.” “You were sleeping,” I hissed under my breath. “Thinking. Sleeping. What’s the diff? It’s all brainwork.” “Are you out of your mind? Didn’t you just have a meeting with the boss today?” “Are you my mother? I just can’t do nothing right in your eyes, huh?” “Goddamn,” I squeezed out through clenched teeth as I left him. I decided I wouldn’t interfere any more. He was on his own, “I can take care of myself, kemosabe,” he said to my back as if giving form to my thoughts. For as ghostly as he was the preceding weeks, Benny dominated the office over the next month with jokes, impressions, dancing demonstrations, and endless chatter about Beef O’Bundy. He brought in sales bin roses for the receptionist, started wearing a new pair of orthopedic shoes, and gave the two secretaries slightly discolored chocolate truffles. The word was he showed up at one of the boss’ kids baseball games, and he and the boss coached from the stands. Some said the two went drinking afterwards but no one could confirm it. A few of the staff went to see him play with the reformed Crawdaddies at a gazebo performance at a local town square. They said he wasn’t too bad except that his teeth kept slipping as he played the trombone. I stayed away because a chill had inhabited our relationship even though I really wanted to see the band. At our next sales meeting he fell asleep at the table. I had noticed his eyelids descending inexorably downward earlier in the meeting, so I watched him closely as sleep descended. First his head tilted forward and his jaw slackened, parting his lips. He kept unconsciousness at bay a few times by jerking his head but he could never open his eyes. The battle had already been lost. The sales manager read some motivational piece about honey bees. The descriptions of hive organization did nothing for my morale. I didn’t listen but I supposed we were workers and he was drone. I heard someone mutter the sales manager wanted to be the queen. I couldn’t argue. Benny slackened and nestled deep into his chair. He began to snore. The first sounds were light wheezing, but then it shifted deep within the sinus cavity and throat, sounding more like a death rattle than anything else. The sales manager stopped, ordered his notes and folded his hands in front of him. He watched Benny sleep, as did all of us. He looked troubled and fitful. I imagined he had not slept peacefully in many years as he looked braced for a coming blow. We shifted in our chairs as we waited for the sales manager’s interest to wane. We sat for several minutes. The quiet drove Benny to the edge of REM. It would have taken a cannon shot to wake him. “You may all leave, but please do not wake Mr. Coco,” the sales manager said in a viscious whisper. We gathered our papers, slid our chairs back quietly and crept from the room to the soundtrack of Benny’s snores. The sales manager didn’t move as he continued watching Benny from across the table. We left the tableau and its horrible conclusion without a witness. The last person out of the room clicked the door shut. We retreated to our spaces thankful to Benny for short-circuiting the lecture. I imagined my legs laden with pollen as I walked to get more coffee. Benny’s disappearance wasn’t noticed for a week. Salesmen often scheduled days away from the office to focus on their customers. The boss encouraged the practice as long as sales rolled in and the salesman phoned in to the office daily. His cubicle lay undisturbed each time I passed. A few personal artifacts were bunched in a tiny circle in the right corner of his desk: a pair of reading glasses, a rubber yellow wrist bracelet that had STRONG TEETH embossed in it, a robin’s feather, and a dog eared photo 05 09 M U S E M Programs at Shaker Heights Public Library & Cuyahoga County Public Library 19 “An edgy intensity driven by a relentless intelligence that refuses to look away or ignore the real world. The range and depth of his emotional insight is unnerving. The powerful deft imagery is drawn from a truly unique creative voice. Highly recommended!” Review fRom Gilda Kelsey Univ. of delawaRe The Cold Wick! Poems by Stephen Koelsch BooKs availaBle diRect thRoUGh tRaffoRd PUBlishinG; on line at amazon, BoRdeRs, B&n; oR oRdeR thRoUGh any local BooKstoRe. isBn 1-4120-7147-X 05 09 M U S M E 20 Mac's Backs-Books on Coventry www.macsbacks.com Coventry Street Fair Thursday June 18th from 6-9 p.m. Booksigning with Harvey Pekar & Joyce Brabner Special Guest Russell Howze, author of Stencil Nation: Graffit, Community, and Art New Arrivals Harvey Pekar/2009 Books The Beats: A Graphic History Studs Terkel's Working: A Graphic Adaptation American Splendor: Another Dollar Bree was chicken trax amid sparrows tread: poems and one long movement Catherynne Valente Palimpsest Susan Petrone A Body at Rest Thrity Umrigar The Weight of Heaven S. Andrew Swann Prophet Congratulations to the LIT on it's 35th Anniversary! “I’ll take the check to him.” I held out my hand waiting for the delivery of the envelope. “Right. Bring it back if you can’t find him. Maybe he just took off,” he said as he handed me the envelope. “Where would he go?” “You have a point.” I collected his personal belongings in a blue plastic grocery bag and looked up his address online. I expected him to live in one of the seedier parts on town, but the address was in a suburb along the lake that hadn’t yet been taken over by rot. I imagined the residence was a possession from an earlier and more successful period in his life. After work that afternoon I drove to his house. The suburb had been mostly developed between 1955 and 1964. The lawns were a little wider than suburbs closer to the city and every house for 20 blocks was a ranch with an attached garage, either on the right or left hand side. Giant oaks and maples towered over the low rise houses casting broad swaths of cool shade. Residents landscaped their yards with evergreens and hostas and the town felt like a well-developed campsite amidst an old forest. I found the address and pulled into the driveway of a brick ranch. The tyranny of leaves rattled and hummed as a breeze from the lake sliced through. The bushes of the house had been sculpted into green globes, and the lawn looked like it had been cut with a straight razor and tweezers. Even the mortar of the brick looked like it had been scrubbed with a toothbrush. The driveway gleamed in the filtered sunlight as if it had been poured just days before. Benny’s old Chrysler sat in the street, leaking. I rang the bell which sounded suspiciously close to Heart and Soul. In my left hand I held Benny’s check and his bag of personal items. An elderly lady answered the door by swinging the door open wide and standing regally behind the latched screen. Her gray hair was molded elegantly and she wore a high-collared silky dress with a bow on the front. She greeted me by arching her right eyebrow and waiting for me to announce my intentions. The smell of potpourri and chamomile tea escaped from the opening. “Ma’am, I’m looking for Benny Coco. I’m from his work and I would like to speak to him.” I felt rumpled and soiled and somehow unworthy to be on her step. “Benny is in the garage,” I walked to the garage under the scrutiny of her imperious eye before the door clicked shut. The garage door was closed and after a moment’s hesitation I knocked and then knocked again. The garage door opener purred awake as the door rose with a rattle and a sway, slowly revealing Benny as he waited for it to lift. His countenance stiffened once he recognized me. “The Grim Reaper returneth. I, sir, awaitheth your judgement,” Benny said in a British accent. Behind him a small television set flickered with the sound off. The set rested on a stack of snow tires five high in front of an overstuffed armchair that bled chunks of polyester from its arms. As my eyes adjusted to the dim light I picked up more detail. Along the back wall a sculpted old fashioned refrigerator sat next to a work bench that held a greasy chain saw, a set of screwdrivers, wrenches, hammers and a hot plate slowly warming a pan of what smelled like broccoli soup. A threadbare Winnie the Pooh carpet had been thrown down on the concrete in front of a wooden single bed that, judging by the intricate headboard, had once belonged to a small girl. Over the bed, along the wall loomed a row of rakes and shovels. A collection of suit coats and stained shirts had been hung on nails on the wall next to the shovels and rakes. A kerosene heater at the foot of the bed emitted an oily vapor. On the other side of the garage gleamed a preserved Buick built a decade before. It looked like it could have had the dealer tags still hanging in the window. “I take it that’s not your car,” I said. Benny turned his head and inspected the car as if for the first time. “No, that car would belong to the lady of the house.” “Not your wife?” “My wife?” “Your wife is the lady of the house?” “No wife. No. This gentle Mistress of the Manor has been kind enough to let me stay in her garage as I iron out a few of life’s wrinkles.” 05 09 M U S E M without a frame of a woman standing in front of a wooden cigar store Indian. I went to the sales manager to inquire about Benny’s fate. “Is he fired?” I could see that he was revising his thoughts on bees as he had scratched several editing marks across his notes. He deliberately set his editing pen down on the desk. He considered me for a moment before reaching over and holding up an envelope with the company logo printed in the upper left corner. “Last check. Goes in the mail today.” “What?” “Your guy hasn’t checked in for a week. A-W-O-L.” “You didn’t fire him?” “For what? I told him to stop farting and sleeping. He got extremely squirrelly with me after that. Didn’t talk to me for a few days then stopped showing up. I couldn’t get an answer on his phone so out goes the check,” he said as he concluded with a shrug that I assumed meant the process was completely evident. 21 05 09 M U S M E 22 “I need a couple of nails to get this stuff off the floor.” “I brought your last check and the stuff out of your office,” I said in a mumble. “Why beat around the bush? Straight as a train in a china shop, I suppose." “What?” I couldn’t help asking. “As if my thoughts on this subject matter in the least.” I offered him the envelope and the blue bag. “You can throw them on the floor. I’ve got my hands full of soup.” I set them down in front of the TV. “I’ve got a gig with the Crawdaddies over at the Medina Summer Fest tonight. We’re the fourth to go on, not a bad slot, five to six pm. Soup keeps me strong.” The back of my neck started itching from being in contact with the arm chair. Suddenly, my torso felt covered in mites and I wanted to rip off my shirt and roll around in a patch of dirt. I perched on the edge of the chair, ready to bolt if the infestation worsened. “I’m sorry it didn’t work out,” I offered as the beginning of a conclusion. “Life, hey,” Benny said with a shrug before he raised a spoonful of soup to his mouth. “Sometimes the bear.” “Right.” “I want to show you something before you leave. I was going to bring it in…” He set down his half-eaten cup of soup on top of the TV and rummaged in a large paper bag that had gone limp from being folded so many times. He produced a video tape that had had several labels adhered and imperfectly removed over its life. He placed the tape in a battered VCR lying on the floor underneath the TV and it clunked awake. The stress of the operation made the machine sound like it had been built with hydraulics. Benny found the video channel with a remote and the screen went blue then an image stuttered. The familiar Beef O’Bundy intro began. The music sounded like a perverse brass quintet playing underwater. The faux bass of an announcer’s voice said “You are about to waste two hours of your life watching a movie that should have never been made and performing actors who should be embarrassed to be paid. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED. Tonight we play Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell, a curious little oddity that will likely haunt your dreams for the rest of your life. Nowhere in the history of celluloid has a monster as scary and dreadful been captured for your viewing pleasure (‘Yeeeeaaaa righhhhhttttt!’ said a sarcastic voice in the background. Now, here are your hosts Beef O’Bundy and his assistant Gimpy Vin Shrieker.” (A warbling shriek punctuated their entrance.) Benny hovered over my shoulder. “This is the show where we introduced the Cigar Store Indian,” he said. “You have the whole show?” “Yea, commercials and the movie and everything.” I settled back in the armchair and forgot about the itching. Benny handed me a cup of broccoli soup in a Styrofoam cup with a plastic spoon, followed closely by a can of beer. I thanked him, but what I really wanted was to hear the crunch of truck tires on our gravel drive announcing the arrival of my dad with a bag of McDonald’s. I knew I was going to waste the next two hours of my life watching this show that should have never been made. I also knew that I was going to enjoy it more than anything I’d seen on TV in a long, long time. M Poetry from The Kent State University Press NeW IN The WICk ChAPBook SeRIeS WINNeR oF The STAN ANd Tom WICk PoeTRy PRIze Far From Algiers Djelloul Marbrook “How honored I am— how lucky—to have been able to choose this superb first book by Djelloul Marbrook that honors a lifetime of hidden achievement.” —Toi Derricotte, Judge Song of the Rest of Us Mindi Kirchner WICk PoeTRy ANThology “Mindi Kirchner’s poems are rich with vivid detail and full of passion and spirit. Song of the Rest of Us recognizes and celebrates ‘the rest of us,’ people whose lives sometimes get overlooked, ignored, by elements of our larger culture.” —Jim Daniels, Judge 2007 Open Chapbook Competition The Next of Us Is About to Be Born The Wick Poetry Series Anthology: In Celebration of the Wick Poetry Center’s Twenty-fifth Anniversary Edited by Maggie Anderson Salt Liz Tilton “A clear, seemingly effortless voice and a special curiosity animate the world Liz Tilton gives us in Salt. And it is a world, ranging from domestic life to manatees and the governor of Texas. Discoveries abound. Salt is smart, subtle, and essential.” —Don Bogen Wick Poetry Series edited by Maggie Anderson Entry guidelines for Wick Poetry Center competitions are available at www.kent.edu/wick. Visit www.kentstateuniversitypress. com for a complete list of winners. “The books in the Wick Poetry Series present exciting writing by new and emerging poets. Diverse, surprising, and politically and emotionally charged, this series has published some of the best new poetry being written, chosen by many of our most beloved and respected poets. The Next of Us Is About to Be Born is a valuable addition to the landscape of contemporary poetry.” —Harvey Hix The Kent State University Press 307 Lowry Hall • Kent, Ohio 44242-0001 ■ www.kentstateuniversitypress.com 05 09 M U S E M “It’s a pretty big house. She doesn’t have a spare bedroom?” “Decorum, my good man, what would the neighbors think or your grown children who live five and seven states away? She is a kind woman, without an ounce of passion. If I were Lancelot I would be unable to scale her daunting fortress. She even keeps the door between the house and garage locked so that I do not succumb to my animal urges. One must knock in order even to use the bathroom. Would you like a cup of soup?” he said in a voice that was meant to ape Johnny Carson but I couldn’t be sure. I declined and he offered me a seat. I sat in the armchair which smelled like mice. Benny walked over to the hot plate and poured the soup into a coffee mug. He wiped a spoon on his pants leg and as he came back he tripped over a trombone that was lying on the concrete without a case. Near it sat an accordion and a snare drum with a neck strap. 23 A global marketplace for your writing Winning attention for your value some huge publishing or Most important for you, writers creative writing has never been retail conglomerate might never will: receive 60 percent of easy. recognize. the sales price of each of their volumes sold; retain all In fact, in the last decade or two, That’s also why I’d like to invite copyrights; and have their work most emerging writers have all serious – including seriously displayed on attractive store probably had an increasingly funny – writers to submit their web pages featuring excerpts, hard time persuading literary work to The Geniocity Shop. author bios and contact links. magazines and book publishers We’re starting a collection In return, we ask only that you even to read their work as of excellent literature – from sign a short-term contract of competition keeps intensifying, poetry, plays and essays to short between six months and a year, agents seem to want only stories, novels and nonfiction – giving Geniocity.com exclusive potential blockbusters and to go with the selection of visual rights to sell your work or works publishing houses generally art, film, music and functional for that period of time. accept nothing but agented designs we’re already building. manuscripts. 05 09 M U S M E 24 Where we go in search of lost books... established and emerging writers offer forgotten published works that deserve to be rediscovered Some of my most memorable reading experiences came from books that I never heard of. I always tell people, for example, that I can’t believe that Frank’s World: The Odyssey of a Fleshy Lump by George Mangels is out of print and mostly forgotten. At minimum, I thought the work would become a cult classic, especially because of its inspiration the film Blue Velvet. Whenever I meet a fellow bibliophile the subject of books HAROLD BLOOM Yale University Author of The Western Canon and Shakespeare: The Invention of The Human The book I recommend is LITTLE BIG by John Crowley. I submit the following comment: John Crowley’s Little Big is a miracle of a fantasy novel. It has sustained about a dozen readings by me and always refreshes me anew. I don’t want to ruin any reader’s experience of it by describing its surprises in advance. I just urge that it be read. So maybe it’s time to take that Why consider The Geniocity manuscript out of the drawer The whole process of reaching Shop? We’re dedicated to and get in it front of the reading, an appreciative, buying searching out the best and buying public at Geniocity.com. public can be difficult and most creative English-language Please check out our site at discouraging. That’s why, when authors, no matter how new and www.geniocity.com, including I started Geniocity.com in unknown, and we plan to find The Geniocity Shop and the June 2008, I wanted to create, them in Northeast Ohio, the rest Submit Your Work page, and not just a great news-and- of the U.S. and the world. The feel free to call 216.544.8848 if opinion webzine about what’s works we select will be brought you have questions. I hope you’ll happening on the cutting out in attractive, limited- give Geniocity.com a try. edge of a whole spectrum of series, softcover additions that fields, but also an online store readers will find enjoyable and CAROLYN JACK featuring the most interesting affordable to collect – and and promising creative works Geniocity.com will market them by artists and inventors of all to make sure as many readers kinds – the kinds of work whose discover them as possible. JONATHON EVISON Author of All About Lulu and West of Here Though widely considered a masterpiece throughout Europe, Bohumil Hrabal’s I SERVED THE KING OF ENGLAND is a hilarious, sensual, and incisive portrait of Nazi-occupied Prague through the eyes of a Quixotic young waiter is, in my humble estimation, vastly underexposed stateside. Anyone who has ever worked in the food service or hospitality industry, must read this book, which was released in 1971 by Petlice, an underground anticommunist press in Prague, and not published in America until 1990. Hrabal was a bigger-than-life (though highly accessible) figure in Czechoslovakia, where he died at the age of 83, falling from a fifthstory hospital window while trying to feed pigeons. inevitably arises, and it is the works that I don’t know that I pay most attention to. I want to know what great books are out there that I may miss. I guess I also sympathize with the writers of under recognized gems: all that hard work and often more talent than others that, perhaps because a lucky break here or there, received recognition and a multitude of readers. – ROB JACKSON LEE K. ABBOTT Ohio State University Author of All Things, All at Once: New & Selected Stories WINTER’S BONE by Daniel Woodrell: Ozarks noir served up in a prose lyrical as it is loopy. Not since the hey-day of Barry Hannah and Dorothy Allison have you read fiction that spins the head even as it roots at the heart. Danny may be the wickedly funniest novelist in captivity. LYDIA MILLET Author of How The Dead Dream and Georger Bush, Dark Prince of Love I’d recommend WAR WITH THE NEWTS, by Karel Capek: This dystopic sci-fi fable, first published in 1936 but unbelievably resistant to aging, was written by the Czech genius best known for coining the term robot (which he actually credited to his brother). Hilarious, poignant, and as gripping as the purest pulp. LAVONNE MUELLER Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow Author of Little Victories, The Mothers, and Hotel Splendid I recommend the play OPEN ADMISSIONS* by Shirley Lauro. It is what I consider a perfect one-act. The play not only has an original haunting theme about a teacher–pupil relationship but also follows dynamic theatrical conflict. I use the play in my teaching and as a reminder to myself to follow an essential dramatic structure. (Note: The play was enlarged into a full-length play but lost its power. I recommend only the one-act.) JAKE SNODGRASS Creator of underground zines Stuart Dybek, in THE COAST OF CHICAGO does all the things that any great writer does, but the one thing that separates him from many others is that his stories always manage to move me. Their impact is so great that I can only read them in short bursts – I read one, maybe two stories, and then I read something else, before coming back for more. They touch me as if they were events in my own life. Memories and memory itself play a big role in his stories. Often, he writes of when he was younger, and the stories he tells are both entertaining and thoughtprovoking, but in the end the focus is not so much on the memories as it is on his memory of them and what that means to him in the present. In his story Chopin In Winter we read about a boy who interacts with a young musician who is dealing with an unplanned pregnancy and an old man who is nearing death. The story focuses on their stories, and in the end we are impacted by those stories, but even more so we are affected by what these memories mean to the boy who is now a grown man. Like him, the reader feels a sort of bitter sweetness for the past, both the character’s and his own. M *out of print but available used 05 09 M U S E M Geniocity.com Book Archaeology 25 A global marketplace for your writing Winning attention for your value some huge publishing or Most important for you, writers creative writing has never been retail conglomerate might never will: receive 60 percent of easy. recognize. the sales price of each of their volumes sold; retain all In fact, in the last decade or two, That’s also why I’d like to invite copyrights; and have their work most emerging writers have all serious – including seriously displayed on attractive store probably had an increasingly funny – writers to submit their web pages featuring excerpts, hard time persuading literary work to The Geniocity Shop. author bios and contact links. magazines and book publishers We’re starting a collection In return, we ask only that you even to read their work as of excellent literature – from sign a short-term contract of competition keeps intensifying, poetry, plays and essays to short between six months and a year, agents seem to want only stories, novels and nonfiction – giving Geniocity.com exclusive potential blockbusters and to go with the selection of visual rights to sell your work or works publishing houses generally art, film, music and functional for that period of time. accept nothing but agented designs we’re already building. manuscripts. 05 09 M U S M E 24 Where we go in search of lost books... established and emerging writers offer forgotten published works that deserve to be rediscovered Some of my most memorable reading experiences came from books that I never heard of. I always tell people, for example, that I can’t believe that Frank’s World: The Odyssey of a Fleshy Lump by George Mangels is out of print and mostly forgotten. At minimum, I thought the work would become a cult classic, especially because of its inspiration the film Blue Velvet. Whenever I meet a fellow bibliophile the subject of books HAROLD BLOOM Yale University Author of The Western Canon and Shakespeare: The Invention of The Human The book I recommend is LITTLE BIG by John Crowley. I submit the following comment: John Crowley’s Little Big is a miracle of a fantasy novel. It has sustained about a dozen readings by me and always refreshes me anew. I don’t want to ruin any reader’s experience of it by describing its surprises in advance. I just urge that it be read. So maybe it’s time to take that Why consider The Geniocity manuscript out of the drawer The whole process of reaching Shop? We’re dedicated to and get in it front of the reading, an appreciative, buying searching out the best and buying public at Geniocity.com. public can be difficult and most creative English-language Please check out our site at discouraging. That’s why, when authors, no matter how new and www.geniocity.com, including I started Geniocity.com in unknown, and we plan to find The Geniocity Shop and the June 2008, I wanted to create, them in Northeast Ohio, the rest Submit Your Work page, and not just a great news-and- of the U.S. and the world. The feel free to call 216.544.8848 if opinion webzine about what’s works we select will be brought you have questions. I hope you’ll happening on the cutting out in attractive, limited- give Geniocity.com a try. edge of a whole spectrum of series, softcover additions that fields, but also an online store readers will find enjoyable and CAROLYN JACK featuring the most interesting affordable to collect – and and promising creative works Geniocity.com will market them by artists and inventors of all to make sure as many readers kinds – the kinds of work whose discover them as possible. JONATHON EVISON Author of All About Lulu and West of Here Though widely considered a masterpiece throughout Europe, Bohumil Hrabal’s I SERVED THE KING OF ENGLAND is a hilarious, sensual, and incisive portrait of Nazi-occupied Prague through the eyes of a Quixotic young waiter is, in my humble estimation, vastly underexposed stateside. Anyone who has ever worked in the food service or hospitality industry, must read this book, which was released in 1971 by Petlice, an underground anticommunist press in Prague, and not published in America until 1990. Hrabal was a bigger-than-life (though highly accessible) figure in Czechoslovakia, where he died at the age of 83, falling from a fifthstory hospital window while trying to feed pigeons. inevitably arises, and it is the works that I don’t know that I pay most attention to. I want to know what great books are out there that I may miss. I guess I also sympathize with the writers of under recognized gems: all that hard work and often more talent than others that, perhaps because a lucky break here or there, received recognition and a multitude of readers. – ROB JACKSON LEE K. ABBOTT Ohio State University Author of All Things, All at Once: New & Selected Stories WINTER’S BONE by Daniel Woodrell: Ozarks noir served up in a prose lyrical as it is loopy. Not since the hey-day of Barry Hannah and Dorothy Allison have you read fiction that spins the head even as it roots at the heart. Danny may be the wickedly funniest novelist in captivity. LYDIA MILLET Author of How The Dead Dream and Georger Bush, Dark Prince of Love I’d recommend WAR WITH THE NEWTS, by Karel Capek: This dystopic sci-fi fable, first published in 1936 but unbelievably resistant to aging, was written by the Czech genius best known for coining the term robot (which he actually credited to his brother). Hilarious, poignant, and as gripping as the purest pulp. LAVONNE MUELLER Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow Author of Little Victories, The Mothers, and Hotel Splendid I recommend the play OPEN ADMISSIONS* by Shirley Lauro. It is what I consider a perfect one-act. The play not only has an original haunting theme about a teacher–pupil relationship but also follows dynamic theatrical conflict. I use the play in my teaching and as a reminder to myself to follow an essential dramatic structure. (Note: The play was enlarged into a full-length play but lost its power. I recommend only the one-act.) JAKE SNODGRASS Creator of underground zines Stuart Dybek, in THE COAST OF CHICAGO does all the things that any great writer does, but the one thing that separates him from many others is that his stories always manage to move me. Their impact is so great that I can only read them in short bursts – I read one, maybe two stories, and then I read something else, before coming back for more. They touch me as if they were events in my own life. Memories and memory itself play a big role in his stories. Often, he writes of when he was younger, and the stories he tells are both entertaining and thoughtprovoking, but in the end the focus is not so much on the memories as it is on his memory of them and what that means to him in the present. In his story Chopin In Winter we read about a boy who interacts with a young musician who is dealing with an unplanned pregnancy and an old man who is nearing death. The story focuses on their stories, and in the end we are impacted by those stories, but even more so we are affected by what these memories mean to the boy who is now a grown man. Like him, the reader feels a sort of bitter sweetness for the past, both the character’s and his own. M *out of print but available used 05 09 M U S E M Geniocity.com Book Archaeology 25 BY JAKE SNODGRASS 05 09 M U S M E 26 W H E N I WA S L I V I NG W I T H M Y SIST E R , we got into the routine of going to The Elks every Wednesday for their fish fry, and after awhile we got to know one of the bartenders there, a guy named Vince. He was pale and thin, about forty years old, with wispy blonde hair and a dead tooth. He had an ugly, skeletal face, but his voice was deep and appealing, like that of a county-western singer. One time, after we had been going there for about six weeks, Vince came over and asked us for our orders, but instead of the usual — fish, slaw and a Crown & Coke — my sister said, “Vince, all I want is a kiss.” But Vince just flashed her his dead tooth and walked away. Later that night, after we’d had our fill of fish and were deep into the drinks, Vince came back and hung out with us. After awhile, he picked up my pack of Winston’s and lit one for himself without even asking, but I didn’t really mind because Vince always treated me good when it came to the drinks. And then even later, he pulled my sister over onto his lap and started whispering in her ear. And then he started kissing her with long silent kisses — and I just sat there, drunk, watching them like it was something good on TV. 05 09 M U S E M Like It Was Something Good On TV 27 BY JAKE SNODGRASS 05 09 M U S M E 26 W H E N I WA S L I V I NG W I T H M Y SIST E R , we got into the routine of going to The Elks every Wednesday for their fish fry, and after awhile we got to know one of the bartenders there, a guy named Vince. He was pale and thin, about forty years old, with wispy blonde hair and a dead tooth. He had an ugly, skeletal face, but his voice was deep and appealing, like that of a county-western singer. One time, after we had been going there for about six weeks, Vince came over and asked us for our orders, but instead of the usual — fish, slaw and a Crown & Coke — my sister said, “Vince, all I want is a kiss.” But Vince just flashed her his dead tooth and walked away. Later that night, after we’d had our fill of fish and were deep into the drinks, Vince came back and hung out with us. After awhile, he picked up my pack of Winston’s and lit one for himself without even asking, but I didn’t really mind because Vince always treated me good when it came to the drinks. And then even later, he pulled my sister over onto his lap and started whispering in her ear. And then he started kissing her with long silent kisses — and I just sat there, drunk, watching them like it was something good on TV. 05 09 M U S E M Like It Was Something Good On TV 27 05 09 M U S M E 28 don’t really look like—“ “I look like Ma Barker, that’s what I look like!” “Yeah, or maybe Aileen’s sister, but not so much like Aileen herself.” “I need a face lift bad! Do you know any plastic surgeons, or anyone who has gone to a good one? I need a really good one!” I lit up a cigarette and rested it in an ashtray on my knee. “Do you want one that can make you look more or less like Aileen Wuornos?” “Less! Less! I can look more like her on my own!” We both laughed, and then my sister grabbed the remote. “I can’t stand this commercial,” she said and started to furiously flip through the channels. I went into the kitchen, and came back with two beers and a whiskey. As I sat down, I gave my sister a beer, and then took a sip of my whiskey followed by a slug of beer. “What’s the name of that schizophrenic you used to take care of when we were growing up?” I asked. “Which one?” my sister scoffed. “The one who lived down the street from us. The one who communicated with Hamilton, Ohio by talking to the ceiling.” “Eva Mae.” “Did she talk to Hamilton everyday?” “Oh yeah, all the time! And if Hamilton wasn’t talking back, she’d put her underwear on her head and get into bed and completely cover herself up with a sheet and lay there as straight as a board and not answer to anyone. And the only way we could coax her out was with her sweet milk.” “Sweet milk?” “Yeah, that’s what she called her vitamin drink. It was the only thing she’d eat! She was super skinny…I mean, like 90 pounds! And her teeth were thin and as black as a rat’s.” I took a drink of my beer and looked at the TV where my sister had turned it back to The Price. I wanted to ask more about Eva Mae, but my sister hushed me and pointed at the TV where the Showcase Showdown was about to get underway. ••• Later that morning, Vince stopped by with some beer. He and I started drinking, while my sister went in the kitchen and cooked us some sausage and eggs. After awhile, Vince slid a cigarette from my pack and lit it up. With the cigarette bouncing between his lips, he said, “What movie do you think has been seen by the most people? The Wizard of Oz? Star Wars? Titanic?” I stared at the TV where an episode of The Golden Girls was muted. “Who cares,” I said. “Come on, have a guess.” “I don’t think so.” “Come on.” My sister stuck her head out over the bar. “E.T.!” she yelled. “E.T.!” I rubbed my forehead with my hand and continued to stare at the TV. “Come on,” Vince said. I dropped my hand into my lap. “Alright,” I said, “Logan’s Run.” Vince wrinkled up his forehead. “That futuristic flick? Come on, man, that didn’t even show in theaters.” “I don’t give a fuck if it didn’t show in the theaters,” I said as I reached out and slid my pack of cigarettes towards me. “It’s still my guess.” Vince shook his head and blew smoke out of his nose. “Yeah, well, I sure as hell ain’t never seen it.” “Whatever.” “Not from beginning to end, I haven’t.” “Whatever.” “I haven’t.” “Whatever.” Vince crushed his half-smoked cigarette into the ashtray, and started to get up, but my sister came around the bar, carrying two plates of food for me and Vince. “Well, what was it?” she said. “E.T.?” “Aw, who gives a fuck,” Vince said as he took his plate and sat down. Then after taking a bite of his sausage, he said, “This is freezing cold.” He dropped his fork onto his plate and shoved it away. “How is that even possible? Huh?” ••• My sister and Vince fought a lot, but that was to be expected, because my sister has fought with every man she has ever known for more than twenty-four hours. But one night they had a huge blow out—one that was more fucked up than usual—and I could tell that it was over for good. After the fight, Vince went out to his car, and my sister went in the bedroom and cried. I went outside to tell Vince to stay the fuck away for good, but somehow I ended up taking a ride with him and picking up some beer. “I’m sick to death of these bitches,” he said as he aimlessly steered us through town. “I don’t need any of them. Right now, I’ve got three chicks that I’m fucking on a regular basis, and there could easily be five others—maybe even ten others—that I could get back on the team at a moment’s notice.” It was cold out that night, and it must have been late November or early December, because the main street in town was decorated for Christmas. Hanging from every streetlamp, I saw candy canes made from tinsel and sparkly lights, and in front of the library, I saw a manger scene with illuminated plastic figurines resting on a bed of hay. Vince pulled into a parking space alongside the street and we sat there, drinking beers and watching the windshield slowly fog up. “You know what I’d like to do?” Vince said. “I’d like to get me a video camera and hide it outside my house. And then I’d like to call every one of those bitches and tell them to be at my house at a certain time. And I’d tell them all to wear something nice and to bring me a home cooked meal. Then, on the big day, I’d turn on that video camera, and leave the country—go to Mexico or Puerto Rico or something— and then later that night, you could go get the video tape and send it to me. That’s exactly what I’d like to do.” Vince laughed and finished off his beer. He then leaned in front of me, opened the glove compartment and pulled out a flask. He took a swig and passed it to me, and I took a swig too, and then Vince laughed again. I almost laughed too, because I started thinking about all those women out in front of his house, all dressed up and holding containers of home cooked food. Then I pictured them all deciding to make the best of it by sitting down on his porch and having a little picnic. And then I thought of Vince getting a video tape of it in the mail. Vince in Mexico or wherever, watching his bitches partake in a potluck on his front porch—that was an image that made me smile. I handed the flask back to Vince and he raised it in a mock toast and then tipped it back for a swig. He then screwed on the cap, stashed it against the crease in the seat, and said, “Cover me,” as he suddenly swung open his door. He jumped out of the car and began running toward the manger in front of the library. As soon as he reached it, he plunged his arms into the cradle, yanked at something, struggled for a moment and then yanked even harder. He then charged back toward the car, cradling a plastic baby as if it was real. “Let’s go! Let’s go!” he yelled, even though he was the driver, and then he gunned it as he simultaneously swung the door shut. ••• When I woke up the next morning, I was on the couch, and my sister was in the Lay-Z-Boy. She was eating ice cream and watching The Price. I think we watched the rest of the show before I said anything. She didn’t even provoke me—she hadn’t even said a word—but something about the way she was acting got under my skin. “It’s the same thing all over again,” I said. “The same things that attract you to a man are the exact same things that you end up hating about him. That’s how all women are—they want it both ways. They want to hook up with a real man, but then as soon as they have him, they want to cut off his nuts. Well, you can’t have it both ways. And if you keep thinking that you can, then you’re stupider than I thought.” I remember my sister looked angry, like she was going to start yelling at me, but then she just said, “I know, I know,” and then let out a couple quiet sobs. “I’m not saying Vince was anything special,” I said. “In fact, that’s the point: he was exactly the same as every other man, but until you see that, this is just going to happen to you again and again, just like it always has.” After that, we didn’t say any more about it. We just watched TV, and then I got us some beers and we drank for most of the day. I remember we watched The Munsters and later we watched Leave It To Beaver, and I remember we both laughed pretty hard at both shows. Then I think we both went to sleep. M 05 09 M U S E M One morning, my sister and I were sitting on the couch, watching The Price Is Right, when my sister pulled out a state ID that she had gotten the day before. “Don’t I look like Aileen Wuornos?” she said as she handed me the ID. “I told the lady at the DMV that when I show my ID at the bank, the teller is going to say, ‘Well, hello, Aileen, we thought they killed you!’” I looked over the photo and then handed it back to her. “It isn’t a perfect resemblance, but—“ “I look so hardened!” “Yeah, but you 29 05 09 M U S M E 28 don’t really look like—“ “I look like Ma Barker, that’s what I look like!” “Yeah, or maybe Aileen’s sister, but not so much like Aileen herself.” “I need a face lift bad! Do you know any plastic surgeons, or anyone who has gone to a good one? I need a really good one!” I lit up a cigarette and rested it in an ashtray on my knee. “Do you want one that can make you look more or less like Aileen Wuornos?” “Less! Less! I can look more like her on my own!” We both laughed, and then my sister grabbed the remote. “I can’t stand this commercial,” she said and started to furiously flip through the channels. I went into the kitchen, and came back with two beers and a whiskey. As I sat down, I gave my sister a beer, and then took a sip of my whiskey followed by a slug of beer. “What’s the name of that schizophrenic you used to take care of when we were growing up?” I asked. “Which one?” my sister scoffed. “The one who lived down the street from us. The one who communicated with Hamilton, Ohio by talking to the ceiling.” “Eva Mae.” “Did she talk to Hamilton everyday?” “Oh yeah, all the time! And if Hamilton wasn’t talking back, she’d put her underwear on her head and get into bed and completely cover herself up with a sheet and lay there as straight as a board and not answer to anyone. And the only way we could coax her out was with her sweet milk.” “Sweet milk?” “Yeah, that’s what she called her vitamin drink. It was the only thing she’d eat! She was super skinny…I mean, like 90 pounds! And her teeth were thin and as black as a rat’s.” I took a drink of my beer and looked at the TV where my sister had turned it back to The Price. I wanted to ask more about Eva Mae, but my sister hushed me and pointed at the TV where the Showcase Showdown was about to get underway. ••• Later that morning, Vince stopped by with some beer. He and I started drinking, while my sister went in the kitchen and cooked us some sausage and eggs. After awhile, Vince slid a cigarette from my pack and lit it up. With the cigarette bouncing between his lips, he said, “What movie do you think has been seen by the most people? The Wizard of Oz? Star Wars? Titanic?” I stared at the TV where an episode of The Golden Girls was muted. “Who cares,” I said. “Come on, have a guess.” “I don’t think so.” “Come on.” My sister stuck her head out over the bar. “E.T.!” she yelled. “E.T.!” I rubbed my forehead with my hand and continued to stare at the TV. “Come on,” Vince said. I dropped my hand into my lap. “Alright,” I said, “Logan’s Run.” Vince wrinkled up his forehead. “That futuristic flick? Come on, man, that didn’t even show in theaters.” “I don’t give a fuck if it didn’t show in the theaters,” I said as I reached out and slid my pack of cigarettes towards me. “It’s still my guess.” Vince shook his head and blew smoke out of his nose. “Yeah, well, I sure as hell ain’t never seen it.” “Whatever.” “Not from beginning to end, I haven’t.” “Whatever.” “I haven’t.” “Whatever.” Vince crushed his half-smoked cigarette into the ashtray, and started to get up, but my sister came around the bar, carrying two plates of food for me and Vince. “Well, what was it?” she said. “E.T.?” “Aw, who gives a fuck,” Vince said as he took his plate and sat down. Then after taking a bite of his sausage, he said, “This is freezing cold.” He dropped his fork onto his plate and shoved it away. “How is that even possible? Huh?” ••• My sister and Vince fought a lot, but that was to be expected, because my sister has fought with every man she has ever known for more than twenty-four hours. But one night they had a huge blow out—one that was more fucked up than usual—and I could tell that it was over for good. After the fight, Vince went out to his car, and my sister went in the bedroom and cried. I went outside to tell Vince to stay the fuck away for good, but somehow I ended up taking a ride with him and picking up some beer. “I’m sick to death of these bitches,” he said as he aimlessly steered us through town. “I don’t need any of them. Right now, I’ve got three chicks that I’m fucking on a regular basis, and there could easily be five others—maybe even ten others—that I could get back on the team at a moment’s notice.” It was cold out that night, and it must have been late November or early December, because the main street in town was decorated for Christmas. Hanging from every streetlamp, I saw candy canes made from tinsel and sparkly lights, and in front of the library, I saw a manger scene with illuminated plastic figurines resting on a bed of hay. Vince pulled into a parking space alongside the street and we sat there, drinking beers and watching the windshield slowly fog up. “You know what I’d like to do?” Vince said. “I’d like to get me a video camera and hide it outside my house. And then I’d like to call every one of those bitches and tell them to be at my house at a certain time. And I’d tell them all to wear something nice and to bring me a home cooked meal. Then, on the big day, I’d turn on that video camera, and leave the country—go to Mexico or Puerto Rico or something— and then later that night, you could go get the video tape and send it to me. That’s exactly what I’d like to do.” Vince laughed and finished off his beer. He then leaned in front of me, opened the glove compartment and pulled out a flask. He took a swig and passed it to me, and I took a swig too, and then Vince laughed again. I almost laughed too, because I started thinking about all those women out in front of his house, all dressed up and holding containers of home cooked food. Then I pictured them all deciding to make the best of it by sitting down on his porch and having a little picnic. And then I thought of Vince getting a video tape of it in the mail. Vince in Mexico or wherever, watching his bitches partake in a potluck on his front porch—that was an image that made me smile. I handed the flask back to Vince and he raised it in a mock toast and then tipped it back for a swig. He then screwed on the cap, stashed it against the crease in the seat, and said, “Cover me,” as he suddenly swung open his door. He jumped out of the car and began running toward the manger in front of the library. As soon as he reached it, he plunged his arms into the cradle, yanked at something, struggled for a moment and then yanked even harder. He then charged back toward the car, cradling a plastic baby as if it was real. “Let’s go! Let’s go!” he yelled, even though he was the driver, and then he gunned it as he simultaneously swung the door shut. ••• When I woke up the next morning, I was on the couch, and my sister was in the Lay-Z-Boy. She was eating ice cream and watching The Price. I think we watched the rest of the show before I said anything. She didn’t even provoke me—she hadn’t even said a word—but something about the way she was acting got under my skin. “It’s the same thing all over again,” I said. “The same things that attract you to a man are the exact same things that you end up hating about him. That’s how all women are—they want it both ways. They want to hook up with a real man, but then as soon as they have him, they want to cut off his nuts. Well, you can’t have it both ways. And if you keep thinking that you can, then you’re stupider than I thought.” I remember my sister looked angry, like she was going to start yelling at me, but then she just said, “I know, I know,” and then let out a couple quiet sobs. “I’m not saying Vince was anything special,” I said. “In fact, that’s the point: he was exactly the same as every other man, but until you see that, this is just going to happen to you again and again, just like it always has.” After that, we didn’t say any more about it. We just watched TV, and then I got us some beers and we drank for most of the day. I remember we watched The Munsters and later we watched Leave It To Beaver, and I remember we both laughed pretty hard at both shows. Then I think we both went to sleep. M 05 09 M U S E M One morning, my sister and I were sitting on the couch, watching The Price Is Right, when my sister pulled out a state ID that she had gotten the day before. “Don’t I look like Aileen Wuornos?” she said as she handed me the ID. “I told the lady at the DMV that when I show my ID at the bank, the teller is going to say, ‘Well, hello, Aileen, we thought they killed you!’” I looked over the photo and then handed it back to her. “It isn’t a perfect resemblance, but—“ “I look so hardened!” “Yeah, but you 29 MONTICELLO, NEW MEXICO 2006 T. LACHINA A R TC R A F T B U I L D I N G 2 570 S U P E R I O R AV E N U E SUITE 203 C L E V E L A N D, O H I O 4 41 1 4 MUSE IS THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL PUBLISHED BY THE LIT ISSN 1942-275X 07 9 771942 275009 W W W.T H E - L I T.O R G NONPROFIT ORG. US POSTAGE PAID PERMIT #4248 CLEVELAND, OH